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Generation Occupy: Reawakening American Democracy

Please join us for a lively conversation between author Michael Levitin and Tobias Snyder, discussing Levitin’s latest book “Generation Occupy: Reawakening American Democracy”.

Event Update: Due to expected rain, this event will take place in the auditorium. Masks required indoors unless eating/drinking. Books and refreshments will be available for purchase.


The fight for a $15 minimum wage. Nationwide teacher strikes. Bernie Sanders’s political revolution and the rise of AOC. Black Lives Matter. #MeToo. Read how the Occupy movement helped reshape American politics, culture and the groundbreaking movements to follow. 

On the ten-year anniversary of the Occupy movement, Generation Occupy sets the historical record straight about the movement’s lasting impacts. Far from a passing phenomenon, Occupy Wall Street marked a new era of social and political transformation, reigniting the labor movement, remaking the Democratic Party and reviving a culture of protest that has put the fight for social, economic, environmental and racial justice at the forefront of a generation.
 
The movement changed the way Americans see themselves and their role in the economy through the language of the 99 versus the 1 percent. But beyond that, in its demands for fairness and equality, Occupy reinvigorated grassroots activism, inaugurating a decade of youth-led resistance movements that have altered the social fabric, from Black Lives Matter and Standing Rock to March for Our Lives, the Global Climate Strikes and #MeToo. Bookended by the 2008 financial crisis and the coronavirus pandemic, Generation Occupy attempts to help us understand how we got to where we are today and how to draw on lessons from Occupy in the future.

Read a recent article published by The Atlantic on Levitin’s latest book using this link.

 

Author Michael Levitin is a journalist and co-founding editor of The Occupied Wall Street Journal. He started as a reporter covering the Cochabamba Water War in 2000 for the La Paz English-language newspaper Bolivian Times. He later earned his master’s degree from the Columbia Graduate School of Journalism and worked as a foreign correspondent in Barcelona and Berlin covering politics, culture, and climate change. His writing has appeared in The AtlanticThe Guardian, NewsweekTime, and the Los Angeles Times, among other publications. His debut novel, Disposable Man, was published in 2019. He teaches journalism at Diablo Valley College in the San Francisco East Bay, where he lives with his partner and daughter.

 

Toby Snyder is a lawyer living in Oakland. In September 2011 he lived two blocks from Zuccotti Park, and watched Occupy Wall Street grow from a small gathering to a global movement

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Michael Levitin

Michael Levitin

Toby Snyder

Toby Snyder

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